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Do you have any additional thoughts on that? I think that's so important. The antihero, the guy we should hate, the guy we should judge, he has played an important part. Finally, as all the characters have, he's played a fundamental part in the destruction of the Ring. Had he not been there, Frodo would have been walking down that [promontory] and we don't know what he would have done.

He does succumb to it finally. It is key that Gollum does play that final moment. In cartoon versions, Gollum has been portrayed as a monster. We were raised to hate monsters, so we have no sympathy at all. You portrayed him as a very piteous character. I think the audience should feel that.

And hopefully they do. Because Frodo is also talking about himself. He's looking at a version of himself. He's carrying the burden of the Ring, and he's looking at someone who is well down the line of suffering from the burden of having carried the Ring. He knows he's going that way. He does, for himself, have to believe that to. We all know people who we really don't like.

Creating an E-Mentoring Community: How DO-IT does it, and how you can do it, too

They might be friends of ours who do things we don't like, or they might be somebody who just makes your day bad and they moan and they give you a hard time. But you somehow feel sorry for them because you know they can't help themselves. Times one hundred, that's Gollum, really. After playing Gollum, do you have a sense of how to help people who are prisoners to addiction? I think I have a greater understanding. I have friends who have been addicts.

I know people who are recovering from alcoholism. I know people who have been through tough times. One, I have enormous respect for the fight they face every day. They really are heroes in their own right for doing what they're doing. Not pity, really. Being non-judgmental. Always believing that there is a redeeming quality in every single human being.

But Gandalf and Aragorn, when they see orcs coming, they don't hesitate to pick up the sword. I think that's the duality.

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That's why there are so many resonances to what's been going on in the last few years. Do you think this gives us any guidance as to when you stop tolerating or accepting or being non-judgmental?

I don't think Tolkien really gives you all the answers. I think he asks the questions. Yes, we show violence. Yes, there's violence involved. Tolkien's not saying whether it's good or bad. He's like a documentary maker in the middle of a war. People have to make their own minds up.

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When I saw you portraying Gollum, I thought of Iago. He's close to power, corrupted by the closeness, jealous of the power. And then I read that you recently played Iago. Did any of that experience inform this experience? Oh for sure. I very purposefully chose to play that role this year. It was a conscious decision. It happened to fit into the theatre program with a director I really wanted to work with.

For me, Iago is a soldier, but everybody likes him, he's good fun, he's a practical joker, he's a trustworthy soldier, he has a great relationship with his general, and they get on very well. And then an event happens, much like the Ring landing in his lap, where a woman comes and steals this man's heart.

He just cannot cope with it. Every day we have jealousy. This begins to eat into him. He can't quite believe that he's feeling these things toward this friend of his. He begins to rather enjoy the pain he's put this guy through.

Creating an E-Mentoring Community: How DO-IT does it, and how you can do it, too

Before you know it, you've become this monster. That can happen to anyone very quickly. If you play Iago as [this guy who says,] "I've plotted and planned to get this guy for a long time. It was a decision to play him as a guy who goes through a transformation, a transition to trying to plug into the dark side.

He chooses to channel all of his energy into something very dark and destructive. Especially playing this part in a story from an author for whom Catholic faith was such a significant element? I was brought up a Catholic, but I got to a point in my life where I began to feel that religions, conventional religions, different religions, all mean the same thing.

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They're just a different way of saying the same thing. I eventually moved away from a specific religion, and I guess I'm much more a believer in energy, and reciprocal energy, and handing out good energy or bad energy. What we leave behind as human beings can be good or bad. The energy continues. It's a physics thing. It just carries on. Every interaction is an interaction, and sometimes they're not great, but hopefully you can try to make positive interactions with people and things and the world around you.

I suppose that's my view. It was a very demanding role. It was very physically exhausting and vocally very tiring. Beyond that, psychologically it was taxing. It was on 35 millimeter, and that was it. But for me, it was like, I played the part and played the scene. When you shoot a scene, it's like you've put a peg in the chart of the character, and you can build from that.

For me, it would be like two years before the definitive scene would be completed, because there are so many processes involved between. There would be motion capture and then revisiting it and then working with the animators and doing more vocal tracks.